Horror at Kintampo Waterfall,at least, 17 feared dead

At least,17 Students from Wenchi were killed and several in critical condition on Sunday the 19th day of March 2017 at a Waterfalls located in Ghana’s Brong -ahafo region town of Kintampo.The students were there on excursion to their untimely death.According to eyewitness, the students were swimming at the waterfalls during which a heavy rain accompanied with thunder strikes that uprooted some trees set in resulting in the death of the Students.a joint team of Ghana police  and Fire service,who acted swiftly,conducted the rescue operations.

Why Cheats will no longer get it easy…

By CPL Ibrahim Hashimu

(GPS)

21-11-2021

Beware, you cheats between the sheets.

A new high-tech mattress detects hanky-panky and informs the owner via a mobile app.

Reacting to a report that Ghana has a high rate of infidelity, a Spanish mattress firm didn’t take the news lying down, the Local in Spain reports.

Durmet developed the Smarttress and its “Lover Detection System.” Twenty-four ultrasonic sensors measure “suspicious movement” in the bed, transmitting data of the tryst, including a 3D mattress model to show where most of the exertion is taking place.the report also opines most Ghanaian beautiful women are as the gold ring nose in the snout of a pig and as such are woman who are pretty but who are turning away from sensibleness.This mattress,there,is designed to determine the good,bad,augly et Al in love relationships,says Durmet.

FACEBOOK HAS ANOTHER INBOX YOU PROBABLY DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT

Facebook has another hidden inbox you probably didn’t realise was there
Users discover hundreds of ‘filtered’ messages buried behind a series of menus that they didn’t know existed

Users find hundreds of filtered messages in a new hidden Facebook inbox. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
Samuel Gibbs
Friday 8 April 2016 12.16 BST Last modified on Friday 8 April 2016 12.17 BST

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Users have discovered hundreds of messages locked in a hidden inbox within Facebook’s messaging system.

The inbox, accessible on the web or Facebook Messenger apps for smartphones and tablets, is part of Facebook’s filtering system, designed to catch spam and other unwanted messages.

However, users, including myself and others within the Guardian, have discovered their “filtered” inbox full of legitimate messages that never made it to the main inbox or Messenger app.

The simplest way to access the inbox is to navigate to facebook.com/messages/other on the desktop.

The filtered messages inbox can be found in the iPhone Facebook Messenger app, or via Facebook’s mobile site. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian
Within the Messenger app the hidden inbox is buried under four menus. To get to it tap Settings, then People, then Message Requests and tap on the “See filtered requests” link.

The filtered messages include anything attempting to send you messages that you have manually filtered out as unwanted, as well as messages from people who are not connected with you on Facebook. I discovered some tens of messages dating back as far as 2008.